Season 2 Episode Guide

Ty's crew comes to the rescue of the adoptive mother of two orphaned crack babies who has been without a roof for two years after being left in the lurch by a shady contractor. The team also includes Paul DiMeo and Tracy Hutson.

Conclusion. An autistic pre-teen, his brother and their deaf parents return from a week-long trip to find that their house has been tricked out with the latest in communication technology and safety devices. On top of that, guest Marlee Matlin has a shocker for both mom and one of her sons.

Part 1 of two. Ty and the crew respond to the call of a 14-year-old who would like to do something great for his deaf parents and autistic younger brother. Which means turning an average house into a high-tech emporium for people living with disabilities, as well as entertaining surprise guest Marlee Matlin.

Ty's team works their magic on a California house owned by the parents of a 6-year-old boy who suffers from rare genetic disorder that has left him with brittle bones and his folks with piles of debt. The redesign includes padded walls, non-slip floors and handrails.

An AIDS activist, recently diagnosed with cancer, and her three HIV-positive adopted daughters get a visit from Ty and company. In addition to fully redone digs, the ladies also get a baby grand piano donated by Elton John and some touch-ups for some of their neighbors. Paul DiMeo and Constance Ramos lend a hand, as do Preston Sharp and Michael Moloney.

In the first half of a two-parter, the team begins to fear that they may not be able to finish work on the home of a paralyzed high-school basketball star within their seven-day window. Which means more sparks than usual are about to fly between Ty and the rest of his repair crew.

A look at how a home was built in Martinez, Calif., to enable 17-year-old Jhyrve Sears to return following extensive treatment for Krabbe Disease, an enzyme-deficiency syndrome, after it was learned that the family home was mold-infested and doctors insisted that the teen could not remain living there.

In the first half of a two-parter, the design team heads to Colorado to build a duplex for a pair of homeless families who will share the residence until they can get back on their feet. Ty Pennington leads the charge, along with Constance Ramos and Paul DiMeo.

Ty and company catch up with several families featured on the series and discuss the effects of their weekly Samaritan acts. Included: why one widower's good deed landed him a hottie from the design team, and how a past recipient won a new life by losing weight. Constance Ramos, Paul DiMeo and Preston Sharp also appear.

An Alabama family of nine---including toddler sextuplets---gets some needed assistance after their house was damaged by Hurricane Ivan in September 2004. “Brady Bunch” mom Florence Henderson lends a hand, as do a bunch of Muppets, including Miss Piggy, Kermit, Fozzie and Animal.

Part 1 of two. A letter from an 8-year-old cancer patient sends Ty and the crew off to spruce up the University Medical Center in Tucson. Helping out on the project are 50 Disney animators, who turn the facility into a cartoon-infused environment while the “Extreme” team goes undercover to do a number on the little girl's family home.

Conclusion. The family of an 8-year-old cancer patient sees what the crew has done to the hospital that treats their daughter before finding out that it wasn't the only location getting a touch-up. Ty Pennington leads the project.

Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger visits for the big reveal after the team redoes the tiny home of a California family who took in their former neighbors' five orphaned children. While the whole lot of them headed off on a cruise, Ty's crew doubled the original house's size in a week.

The crew heads to Louisiana to renovate a 130-year-old former plantation cottage owned by a widow and her three boys. Ty Pennington leads the project, but gets a little help from pro-BMX rider Mat Hoffman.

A Florida man who was blinded in an electronics-store shootout gets a navigation-friendly house courtesy of Ty and the team. The job required the work of more than 1000 volunteers and left the locale complete with rounded counter edges and other safety-oriented design changes.

In the first of a two-part project, Ty and the team give it their all to expand the tiny Long Island home of a widowed cop with three sons under the age of five. Also lending a hand are more than 300 local volunteers and the “singing policeman,” Daniel Rodriguez.

Part 1 of two. Former POW Jessica Lynch and the team work their magic for the parents and orphaned kids of PFC Lori Piestewa, the first American woman killed in the Iraq War. Lynch nominated the family for the good deed, which also includes a memorial for Native American veterans. Ty Pennington leads the project.

Premise: Families get the home-repair treatment from a team of designers in this popular spin-off from the personal-makeover hit. Another offshoot, `How'd They Do That?' takes a closer look at the work done on each house.
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